BenBurch
Gatekeeper of The Left
Which is a different argument than Romney is making.
If they tried to defend only the arguments Romney actually is making, they wouldn't have anything to whinge about.
Which is a different argument than Romney is making.
Not inconsistent with his platform at all, only in your mind. I'm also for keeping jobs here, and growing job opportunities in the USA. But I know that some industries have moved offshore for good reasons and will continue to. That's little different than saying we need to farm, but let's farm in that gently rolling valley with lush grass instead of the rocky hillside.Which is a different argument than Romney is making.
And for the record, Romney is wrong when he accused Obama (or even the Obama campaign) of being a liar for calling him a felon. They didn't call him a felon. They said either he lied to American people or he lied to the SEC which might be a felony.
They are, of course, entirely correct. There is no way, in conventional use of language that the statements in the 2000-2001 SEC filings are consistent with Romney's claim to have "left any role" with Bain in 1999.
And again, in regular ordinary language, Romney is trying to have it both ways: to take credit for everything Bain ever did that can be put in a positive light, but pretend he isn't responsible for decisions that created jobs overseas rather than in the U.S.
The delicious irony in all of this is that Romney started out by using his time at Bain to demonstrate what an awesome leader he was. What a brilliant financial strategist. How his personal brilliance led to prescient investments in awesome ideas.
Now he's trying to tell us that from 1999-2002, Bain operated as a ghost ship and basically ran itself with no input from anyJohn GaltCEO at all.
Obama is quite familiar with the legal strategy of argument in the alternative, and Obama has provided us with a textbook example.
In argument in the alternative, you present the different alternative interpretations of events, and in doing so, attempt to show that theory you are trying to prove stands up under all interpretations, or failing that, that no scenario provides a favorable outcome for the opposition.
No. There is a long history of precedent for corporate personhood, but the Citizens United ruling confers upon corporations a new and enhanced legal stature by declaring them to be the equal of human beings under the First Amendment free speech clause.What on earth are you talking about? Citizens United merely restored what had always been the case prior to 2003. That's not uncharted waters, that's almost the entirety of our history. McCain-Feingold, not Citizens United, was the uncharted waters.
Which of course means that it never noticed when he left. Which implies that his role was always insignificant. If it were true that he had left it without a master at the helm.
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Since there is no logical way the conflicting statements can be made consistent, Romney simply lashes out against a strawman, largely ignoring the actual problem.
No. There is a long history of precedent for corporate personhood, but the Citizens United ruling confers upon corporations a new and enhanced legal stature by declaring them to be the equal of human beings under the First Amendment free speech clause.
And like an animal thrashing in a trap, wounds himself more deeply by the moment.
Now, one caution; Such animals are dangerous. Best to stand off and let them thrash rather than administer the coup de grace.
So you see us having simply returned to, what, the pre-2003 Super PAC era?I'll side with Zig on this point.
So you see us having simply returned to, what, the pre-2003 Super PAC era?
The Republican presidential nominee is out this morning with a flurry of releases focusing attention away from Bain Capital. Ingredients include: a polling memo from Neil Newhouse arguing that Obama's attacks aren't working, a web video reviving the "crony capitalism" line of attack against Obama and a softball "Fox and Friends" interview in which Romney got to stick to his narrow talking points on all of the above.
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I'm not sure what you think it did say, but it's unfortunate (in my opinion) that the D.C. US District Court of Appeals chose to interpret it the way they did.No. We are in 2012, and a lot has changed other than McCain-Feingold. But I disagree with your characterization of the Citizens United decision. It did not say what you claim it said.
"The Obama campaign people keep on wanting more and more and more, more things for their opposition research to pick through and make a mountain out of."...a softball "Fox and Friends" interview in which Romney got to stick to his narrow talking points on all of the above.